Right-wing want action on refugees
Right-wing parties have urged junior justice minister Nebahat Albayrak to take immediate steps to reduce the number of asylum seekers coming to the Netherlands after figures showed numbers have doubled so far this year.
In 2007, 7,102 people applied for asylum but the figure in 2008 has already reached 7,034, the Telegraaf reported on Saturday. The ministry expects the full year total to reach 16,000.
‘I am shocked,’ Christian Democrat MP Wim van de Camp told the AD. ‘It cannot go on like this.’
The justice ministry says most of the new asylum seekers come from Iraq and Somalia. Van de Camp said he wanted an end to the almost automatic admittance of Iraqis, arguing that the country has become much safer.
Liberal (VVD) MP Henk Kamp accused the minister of doing nothing while other European countries adopted tougher asylum rules.
VVD MPs and members of the anti-immigration party PVV blame the increase on the amnesty for long-term asylum seekers introduced last year. The amnesty led to some 27,500 people who had been refugees in the Netherlands for longer periods being given residency permits.
However, Trouw points out that the rise is partially due to around 1,000 applications from Chinese people already living illegally in the Netherlands who believed a rumour that they could become legal if they registered.
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